Gilbert Maminot, or Magnimot, (d. August, 1101), was a Norman bishop in the eleventh century. He was born of 'a substantial Norman family of the middle rank', in Courbépine, his father being the knight Robert of Courbépine. He was known to his contemporaries as a capable administrator, and, according to Marjorie Chibnall, he was more than a match for Robert Curthose, who had succeeded his father, William the Conqueror, to the title of Duke of Normandy. Prior to his ascension to the see of Lisieux, Maminot had been the personal physician and chaplain to William the Conqueror.
Gilbert Maminot, or Magnimot, (d. August, 1101), was a Norman bishop in the eleventh century. He was born of 'a substantial Norman family of the middle rank', in Courbépine, his father being the knight Robert of Courbépine. He was known to his contemporaries as a capable administrator, and, according to Marjorie Chibnall, he was more than a match for Robert Curthose, who had succeeded his father, William the Conqueror, to the title of Duke of Normandy. Prior to his ascension to the see of Lisieux, Maminot had been the personal physician and chaplain to William the Conqueror. (en) Gilbert Maminot (Gislebertus Maminotus) est un évêque de Lisieux de 1077 à 1101, année de son décès. (fr)
Gilbert Maminot, or Magnimot, (d. August, 1101), was a Norman bishop in the eleventh century. He was born of 'a substantial Norman family of the middle rank', in Courbépine, his father being the knight Robert of Courbépine. He was known to his contemporaries as a capable administrator, and, according to Marjorie Chibnall, he was more than a match for Robert Curthose, who had succeeded his father, William the Conqueror, to the title of Duke of Normandy. Prior to his ascension to the see of Lisieux, Maminot had been the personal physician and chaplain to William the Conqueror. (en) Gilbert Maminot (Gislebertus Maminotus) est un évêque de Lisieux de 1077 à 1101, année de son décès. (fr)